Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Custer County Republican. (Broken Bow, Neb.) 1882-1921 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 20, 1910)
Tlie Ouster County Republlca D. M. AMSBERRY , Editor BROKEN BOW . . NEUHASK * * * * fr MEWS EPITOME THAT CAN 80OI BE COMPASSED. * MfllY EVENTS ARE MENTIONEI Home and Foreign Intelligence Cor dcnscd Into Two and Kour Line Paragraphs. Foreign. The Russian foreign office has takoi no action on the memorandum PIT wonted by the United States govern inont relative to the noutrall/.atlon o the Manchurlaii railroad , which lmi Itccn submitted for a careful examlua lion conjointly by the ministers o ilimncu and v > ar. The ultimate attl tude of Rupsla will depend largely up on the reception of the proposals bj the other powers , and the do\i > lop mcnts In this matter will neeeasurllj consume a great deal of time. Dr. Frederick A. Cook's original note books have arrived at Copenha gen and will bo examined by the com mittee Immediately. Hector Salmon- con says , however , that the investiga tion will not alter the committee's judgment. Ho has seen the notebooks mid Is still convinced that the explor er's claim to the discovery of the Polo is not bonalldo. Maurice Henry Hewlett , the novel : 1st , has entered the election fight with n two column manifesto addressed to "worklngmon of England , " in which , describing himself as one of your- r.olves , gaining my livelihood by the work of my head and hands , " ho re minds the workers that they form the overwhelming majority of the elec torate , and can gain everything they want by two strokes of the pencil In the polling booth. The first fatality In England to re- unit from a suffragette disturbance oc curred when Alfred llidson , a police man , died from Injuries received dur ing n riot outside the Colllseum on August 10 , last. Sir Edward Grey , the foreign secretary , was addressing n mass mooting inside the building. An attempt on the part of a largo body of suffragettes to enter pre cipitated aj-lot , In which Hudson wa ? injured Internally. General. Omaha's persistence and determ ined effort to establish a wool market has again won recognition In the reso lutions.of the Natural Wool Growers' association adopted In Salt Lake. The house adopted a resolution pro vldlng for an Investigation of the In tcrlor and forestry deportments. An Investigation Into the alleged domination of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad company by the Pennsyl vania system so far as It affects freight shippers In West Virginia is to be made. J. C. Mabray and other alleged nionii bors of the "big store" swindling syn. dlcato will have to stand trial under the indictment returned against them last September by the federal grand jury In Council Bluffs on the charge of conspiracy to use the mails fraud ulcntly. The names of ten successful archi tects who have submitted comparative designs for a $2,500,000 monument in Now York to Robert Fulton , were made public by the jury of the Robert Kulton Memorial association. Rev. E. Burt Methodist bishop of Rome , officiated at the laying of the corner stone for the Methodist Epls copal Institute. After thirty-five years In the government - ment service Mrs. Anna Elizabeth 1'hllpott , within six years of being a centenarian , Is dead at her home in Washington. Honoring the memory of Albert Pihu , the great exponent of Scottish Rite masonry , exercises celebrating the hundreth anniversary of his birth were held In Washington. low i will send fifty-two delegates to the world's Sunday school convention which will bo held in Washington , D. C. , on the dates of May 19-24. The opinion at Washington is that the president will soon break with Speaker Cannon over legislation. Five war vessels of the United States will take part In the celebra tion of the first centennial of the In dependence of the Argentine repub lic at Buenos Ayrcs about May next. Walter Lonsdale , Dr. Frederick A. Coo's secretary , announce that he liad received a letter from Dr. Cook , Itut ho declined to give the explorer's oddrcss. I'j ' At Boideaux , France , Leon Do La Orange , the noted French aeronaut , was killed while making a flight. He fell with his machine from a height of about slxty-llvo feet and was crushed under wreckage. In far from good health and grief fitrlcken at the recent sudden death of his daughter , Jean , Samuel L. Clemens , hotter known as Mark Twain , sailed for Bermuda. Oil account of Hoods Los Angeles was Isolated forty-eight hours. A bill is pending In congress lookIng - Ing to the promoting of rifle practice. An Alaskan prospector denies Cook's story in which ho is alleged to have been rescued from a bear by the explorer. The United States government iu dissatisfied with President Mndrlz In Nicaragua. Omaha Indians voted against pr < posed merger In n council held n Walthlll. President Taft Bent to Uio nonat nomination of Captain Charles I : Vrct'land of the navy to bo a rear ad mlral. The Scott expedition in search o the south polo In now assured , tli English government having promlsci $100,000 towards the $200,000 which Ii the estimated expense. President Tat * . Is ntlll looking for ward to a trip to Alaska late In tin coming spring. He proposes to go tt , lho far northwestern territory Imtno dlatcly after the adjournment of con The first of the automatic sugar Weighing scales which the treasurj department contemplates Inlrodiiclnt at Now York Is now ready for a tesl , at Boston , where the factory Is lo catcd. The shortage of freight cars foi the United States now totals 21,051 , according to the latest fortnightly bulletin of the America Railway asso ciation. C. II. Ackert , vlco president anil general manager of the Southern rail way , has resigned and it Is announced by President Flnlcy that ho will retire from I ho Southern on January 15/- In its search nt New York for In formation about men "higher up" In the sugar underwolghing frauds the federal grand Jury had u-'foro It Secretary - rotary Charles R. Helkc of the Ameri can Sugar Refining company. Charles Schmidt , alias Mike Jordan , who murdered Mrs. Teresa Barnhart , Iwlth whom ho boarded , gave that crime a sensational climax next morn ing , when ho returned to Akron , O. , and killed 1 Imsclf In front of the Barnhart home. Darius Ogden Mills , , ono of the most widely known financiers and philanthropist i In the United States , a pioneer of California and father of , Mrs. Reid , wife of the ambassador to Great Britain , died at his winter homo near San Francisco. Nine persons are dead and two oth ers are not expected to survive as the 'result of eating canned peaches con taining ptomaine poison on Sunday night at Sawtolle , Cal. War on high price" has begun at Washington by the institution of a boycott against combinations. W. A. Gorman , tralllc manager of the St. Louis , Rock/ Mountain & Pa cific railroad , died after being ill three days at Raton , N. M. Mrs. Charles P. Taft of Cincinnati has bought the ball park of the Phi ladelphia National league , for about $250,000. She gives the ball club u ninety-nine year lease on the park .with the privilege of buying It at the end of twenty years. Darius Ogdcn Mills , the Now York financier and philanthropist , died at his rural homo , Mllbrae , of heart failure. In an opinion by Justice Day the supreme premo court of the United States held to bo invalid the ordinance adopted by the city council of iho city of Min neapolis , Minn. , in 1907 , requiring the Minneapolis Street Railway company to sell six tickets for 25 cents. Washington. Representative Hitchcock of Omaha Issued a statement in which ho virtually admitted that ho is con sidering becoming a candidate at the primaries for United States senator to succeed Senator Burkott. Mr. Hitchcock declined to make a formal announcement of his candidacy , but his friends in the house declare that lie will do so at a later day. Efforts are to be made at the pres ent session of congress to have that body pass a law permitting the com pulsory retirement of superanuated government employes and providing for pensions for such employes. Sec retary MacVeagh has instructed Her bert D. Brown of his department to draw up a plan. Officials of tiio public .health and marine hospital service In this city are congratulating themselves on the fact that during the last calendar year thcro was a general and marked Im provement In the public health condi tions throughout the United States. December's fiscal operations of the national government showed a bal ance ou the credit side the first time during the fiscal year 1909-10 , and the first time since the Payne- Aldrich tariff law went Into effect , riio receipts aggregated $59,827,530 nud the disbursements $57,713,790. leaving a balance of $2,113,711. The first and probably the most bril liant of Iho formal state receptions planned for the present White House season was given by the president and Mrs. Taft in honor of the diplo matic corps. Some 1.500 guests in all wore Invited. Mrs. Taft was present throughout the evening. Senator Crawford of South Dakota introduced a resolution calling upon the department of commerce and la bor to make an Investigation to as certain the reasons for the exceedingly - ingly high cost of living. Crawford has boon In consultation with cfil- eials of the department and they have assured him that they can furnish the desired information if congress luthorlzes the investigation. A fortune of $60,000 In gilt-edged- curities awaits the heirs of Jeremiah Moynihan , lyi aged miser-ragman whr died In St. Louis last week. Personal. Flukolstelii , the would-be robber of New York , was found dead In a tunnel leading to the vaults. Reprosoiitatho Norrls has an ar ticle in La Follotte'3 magazine on the rule of Speaker Camion. General William Booth , the founder af the Salvation army , was granted anew now trial in his effort to oust the American Salvation army. APPLIES TO STATE BOARD FOF LOWER ASSESSMENT. BRIDGES OLDMIL8 LIGH1 Claims That the Line la Purely Local and In no Sense the Part of Any Big System. In Its application to the state board of assessment to reduce- its valuation in Nebraska the St. Joseph & Grand Inland railroad in Nebraska Hays that for the year ended June 30. 1908 , It had pail in taxes an amount equal to 5 per cent of Its gross earnings , while other roads , it says , have paid no more than 'IVfc per cent. In discussing the physical valuation of the road the report ways last year the company constructed in Kansas 0.7U miles of road through a hilly coun try for a total of $18,700 a mile , ex clusive of equipment. Were the bridges now on this road twenty-live yearn old. Instead of new , and had they not been replaced during the period , which is the condition of the bridges on the Nebraska part of the road , the report says , the deprecia tion would have been 50 per cent , or approximately $26,000. The Kansas line traverses a hilly country , BO more than twice aa much grading had to bo done on It than would be done or had lccn done on the Nebraska line , there fore half the coat of grading , or $23- J85 , should DJt.cductcd from the value of the Nebraska line on that account. This , the report says , would leave the > rcsent value of the line , if built under .ho same conditions aa in Nebraska , $77,851.58 , or $11,000 n mile , without equipment. The equipment , the report says , if twenty-live years old , would be valued at approximately $2,830 a mile , making i total valuation per mile of $13,830 , including equipment. The average est of constructing a similar railroad 'n ' Nebraska , the report says , is as 'ollows : Elghty-live-pound steel , $10- 397.80 ; Heventy-Iive-pound steel , $9.- r)77.80 ; sixty-pound steel , $8,920. To this should be added the cost of the right-of-way , which in Nebraska should not exceed $73 an acre or $900 > er mile. The report says this road is purely a ocal road and is not a part of any big system and does not act as a feeder for i system. The average amount of freight handled per train during 1908 was 228 tons. The traffic handled In Nebraska was 25 per cent less than on ) ther parts of the road or 170 tons. The gross earnings per mlle of passenger - songer train , according to the report , was 70 cents. The- road has paid no llvidend on its capital stock since 1901. Lincoln Has a Complaint. Lincoln Is complaining because Oma- m is receiving extra consideration at ho hands of the railroads in the way of new buildings and no .preparations ire made for the Capitol City. It IB minted out that Omaha is to have wo now headquarters buildings and wo new freight houses and Improve- uents to the Union station , while noth- ng is to be done for Lincoln. In the omplaint Lincoln avers that it has ? heu and received larger tonage from he railroads 'In proportion" than the Ity of Omaha. Railroads to Have Inning. Permission has not yet been given > y the supreme court to docket the case Hied by the attorney general gainst the Union Puclllc and the Turlington railroads for permitting the ale of liquors on trains. Instead the ourt Instructed the attorney general o notilly the railroads of his action ml give them an opportunity to be leard if there is objection to the case ) eing brought in the supreme court ather than in the regular order of justness. Disciplining a Fraternity. The first fraternity of the State mil- ersity to feel the effect of the new estrlctlons Imposed upon the Greek ettor chapters is Alpha Tau Omega. By refusing to have a chaperon at Its ecent party the Alpha Tan Omega lolated one of the university regula- ions governing social affairs , and the icnalty imposed for its misconduct is hat It shall not be allowed to enter- aln any young women at its chapter louse until after the Easter recess in \pril Installation of Telephone. The railway commission has issued in order against the .Missouri Pacific allroad company to Install a telephone f the Plattsmouth Telephone company n Us olllces at Murray and Nehawka icfore January 21 or by January 25 how cause why this has not boon one. New Light Company. The Orleans Light & Power company of Orleans has received permission rom the railway commission to issue lock to the amount of $10,000. This s a now company just organized. Cherry County Case , The supreme court gave leave to docket the case of Jordan against Quibble from Cherry county to settle whether a woman elected treasurer of Cherry county may hold the olFlce. The answer day is set for January 24. Last Is First. York county's treasurer Is the llrst county treasurer In the state to make its annual settlement with the btate treasurer. Ho remitted $2,931) ) , which s the balance In taxes duo the state from York county for the year 1909 SOILS OF NEBRASKA. Changes Effected by Cultivation ot the Same , ' 1 he Nebraska Experiment Station has just Issued Bulletin No. Ill , en titled , "Changes In the Composition of the Loess Soils of Nebraska Caused by Cultivation. " The bulletin is issued as 11 prelimi nary answer to the often asked ques tion : "To what extent has the fer tility of the soil of Nebraska been de pleted and what will bo the result ot the continuance of the present methods of farming ? " The analyses reported In the bulletin indicate wherein the chief changes in compo sition have taken place during the past thirty to llfty years of cultivation and also wherein the most rapid changes of the future are to be ex pected. The term "loess , " while still more or loss unfamiliar to the farmers , will gradually become well known to them , as It Is the name of the deep , uni form , stone-free , heavy loam soil which covers nearly all the southeast ern half of the state. The bulletin gives the results of the analyses of many samples of soil taken at different depths from the surface Inch to the sixth foot. It also shows the composition of the surface soil of prairie Holds compared with that of adjacent long cultivated fields the history of which Is known. It would appear from the analyses that the only form of plant food that has as yet shown a diminution suf ficient to be detected by chemical ana lysis Is nitrogen. The only Import ant soil constituents , whether used as plant food or not , that have de clined appreciably after thirty to fifty years of cultivation , are the nitrogen and the organic matter. These two constituents fall and rise together. They decrease rapidly In amount from the surface downward. Accordingly the washing away or blowing away ot the surface soil will make the soil poorer in these constituents. The greatest losses in the past have been caused by washing or blowing. The content of the other forms of plant food is rather higher In the subsoil than in the surface soil and , accord ingly , Is not Injuriously affected by the removal of surface soil. To maintain the supply of nitrogen and organic matter , it will be neces sary to prevent the removal of sur face soil by wind or water in so far is possible Further , the burning of straw and stalks should be avoided uid all barnyard manure should bo returned to the land. Even if these precautions be observed there will be a steady decline in the cultivated llleds unless legumes ( clover or ilfalfa ) be grown or the produce of ) ther fields be fed and the manure ap- illed. By growing clover or alfalta : he nitrogen and organic matter may be Increased at the same time that a profitable crop is obtained. Residents of Nebraska whose names ire not on the Station mailing list nay obtain this bulletin free of cost by applying to E. A. BURNETT , Director , Agricultural Experiment Station , Lincoln , Neb. County Option Fight. State Superintendent Paulson of the Vnti-Saloon league and Rev. Samuel fSanexz Batten of Lincoln have issued in appeal for money to help them so- Mire the enactment of a county option aw. In their appeal for financial help hose officers , of the league set out that hey do not Intend to insist that any mrty shall provide a pledge for county iptlon in its platform , but that condi- latcs for the legislature will be asked o make definite statements of their land on the question. 3rof. Wilson Strikes a Warning Note. In a talk before the freshman law lass of the state university Prof. II. I. Wilson of the University of Ne- jraska Law college faculty declared hat large cities in which universities re located are a menace to the edu- atlon of the young Americans who ttend those Institutions ; that they ffer too many sources of amusement nd entertainment which enervate and nfceblc the young blood. The largo Ity oifers too many pleasures for con- Istent study by the college students vho live in It ; the small town gives he best college atmosphere , and as result produces the best college M-aduates. Big Day for Treasury. .More money was paid into the state reasury recently than on any one ay so far as the ollice force remem- uembers. According to Mr. Forbes , bookkeeper , It was the banner day In he history of the treasury. The total mount collected was $101-183.81 ! . Object to Grain Rates. The Omaha grain exchange has led a complaint against the Union 'acific and the Burlington railroads , vith the State Railway commission , alleging discrimination in grain rates in favor of Kansas City. The ice crop is fine everywhere Jn the state and much of It is being gath ered. Pardons by Governor. During the past year Governor Shal- lenberger has issued pardons or com mutations to seven convicts In the state penitentiary. This is the small est number of convicts that has been let out In one year by any executive of the state within ten years at least. The governor has adopted the policy of insisting upon the county attorney and district judge who tried the con- \lct endorsing the application for par- dou or commutation , and also that there shall be come new condition aiSslng which would justify clemency. NEWS NOTES OF INTEREST FROIV VARIOUS SECTIONS. ULL SUBJECTS TOUCHEDUPOh Religious , Social , Agricultural , Pollt leal and Other Matters Given Due Consideration. The Midwest Life of Lincoln closci the year 1909 with $2,000,000 ot insur ance in force , all written in Nebraska The work of making the prellmlnarj Biirvey for the Kearney & Belolt , Kan. railway is rapidly Hearing completion Governor Shallonbcrgcr has recelvei an Invitation to attend a celebration of Jefferson's birthday , to be held al Washington. D. C. , April 13. The county officials of Buffalo countj have asked for an Increase In salaries under the theory that the population of the county exceeds 25,000. R. R. Copsoy of York county was the first county treasurer to settle up with the state treasurer's oillce on the business of the past year. Mrs. J. N. Grant , a former resident of Beatrice and mother of R. W. Grant of that city , died at the home of a daughter In Seattle , Wash. Henry Gentry , a farmer two miles south of Stella , sold a span of mules last week to a horse buyer1 for $490 At J. M. Stanley's sale a span of mules brought $575. The Midwest Life has good openings for active , progressive men to repre sent it locally. Write the company at Lincoln for particulars. A walk through the snow with both shoes off , and one foot even bare , was the act of n drunken man from Central City at Grand Island. It Is feared that he will lose one foot. Mons N. Nelson last week bought the John Corlson farm east of Oakland for $22,000 , or at a price of $137.50 per acre. This is the highest price ever paid for land in that vicinity. Mrs. Frank Koontznmn , who lived near Albion , while on the road to town with one of her sons , was taken 111. They turned around and drove home where she died on reaching the liouse. Willie Night Clerk Frank Grace of the Evans hotel , Holdrcge , was tempo rarily absent early in the morning , a burglar entered the hotel office , and by working quickly made his getaway with about $200 In cash. Jacob Branton , who lives four miles northwest of Blair , has the distinction 3f growing an ear of corn with an unever number of rows of grains. It was a leading feature at an agricul tural exhibit held in Blair. Mrs. George Stutheit , postmistress it Smyrna , five miles east of Superior , HIS sent in her resignation and a suc cessor has not yet been named. It Is lulte probable that the postoflice at hat place will he discontinued. Ed Smith , a young farmer living near Fullerton , appeared upon the streets armed with a double barreled motgun and a 38 revolver , threatening inyone to approach him. He was over- lowered and placed in custody. James F. Forricr , who came to Ash- and from L'oulsvllle several months igo and embarked in the livery busl- loss , later selling out and engaging In he restaurant business , was the vie- Im of a burglar , who entered his room md secured $120. John Ginglon , a foreigner from Great trails , Mont. , was found wandering iround the farm of John McNulty , two lilies from Alliance , in a badly frozen iondition. He was taken to the Alll- ince hospital where he is in quite a ierious way. The Farmers' Grain & Live Stock lompauy elevator was burned at Oak- and. There were about thirteen thou- icand bushels of grain in the elevator md all of it is practically a total loss. The building was valued at about ! 5,000 and the grain destroyed was allied fully as high. Judge A. A. Welch of Wayne , an- lounces that the first term of court In ho Ninth district will be held nt , 'lerce on February 7. At this term vlll come up the case of the State vs. iarry Joyce , who Is now in the county ail charged witlt robbing the Farmers' Hate bank at Hadar last January. E. R. Kuible , county treasurer of Jherry county , has refused to turn ver the oflice to Miss Gertrude Jor- lan , who was elected treasurer at the 'all election , on the grounds that Miss Tordau is not eligible to hold u county office. The case will be carried to the supreme court. A Cleveland ( O. ) dispatch Mrs EHle Iddllngs of North Platte. Xeb. , secured her husband , Charles E. Id dllngs , on a habeas corpus writ and started west with him. She charged that his brothers and sister in Warren , O. . had held him in their home with out her consent. Iddlings is said to ) o suffering from nervous -trouble. In buying life insurance it is a sound jusiness proposition to buy it In a No- iraska company. The Mldwcsl Life of Lincoln issues all the standard forms of policies. Write the company , glv- ng age nearest birthday , and it will send you a sample policy. Edward Brouhard , son of if. Brou- lurd , president of the Bank of Beaver City , committed suicide by shooting Himself , with a target rifle , In the breast. He had just celebrated hto 21st year of age. Mrs. B. F. Kroeger is dead and ulno members of the families of B. F. Kroeger and C. Dako , farmers near full-bury , are ill from trichina poison ing. The two families ate a quantity ) f raw pork sausage. The Illness was supposed to bo grippe. Mr. Krooger died , and two others , it is said , cannot recover. Physicians say the Illness Is due to trichina. liTHE "QUANTITY , QUAL- A THE THREE ESSENTIALS THAT ARE GIVING WESTERN CANADA Greater Impulse Than Ever This Year. The reports from the grain fields of Central Canada , ( which comprises the Provinces of Manitoba , Saskatchewan and Alberta ) arc to hand. The year 1909 has not only kept pace with pre vious years In proving that this portion tion of the Continent Is capable of producing n splendid yield of all the smaller grains , but it has thoroughly outstripped previous seasons. There Is quantity , quality and price and from all parts of an area o/ about 320,000 square miles there conies the strong refrain of contentment and satisfac tion. In the distribution of the con ditions causing It no district has been overlooked. Various estimates of the total yield of wheat for the country have been made , but it is not the vast total that influences the general reader so much as what has been done individually. The grand total say 130 million bushels - els may haVe its effect on the grain price of the world ; it may be Interest ing to know that in the world's mar kets the wheat crop of Canada has suddenly broken upon the trading boards , and with the Argentine , and with Russia and India , is now a fac tor in the making of prices. If so to day , what will be its effect five or ten years from now , when , Instead of there being seven million acres under crop with a total yield of 125 or 130 million bushels , there will be from 17 to 30 million acres in wheat with a yield of from 325 to GOO million bush els. When it is considered that the largest yield In the United States but slightly exceeded 700 million bushels , the greatness of these figures may bo understood. Well , such is a safe fore cast , for Canada has the land and It has the soil. Even today the Prov ince of Saskatchewan , one of the three great wheat growing provinces of Can ada , with 400,000 acres under wheat , produces nearly 90 million bushels , or upwards of one-tenth of the greatest yield of the United States. And Sas katchewan Is yet only In the begin ning of its development. As Lord Grey recently pointed out in speaking on this very subject , this year's crop does not represent one-tenth of the soil equally fertile that Is yet to bo brought under the plough. Individually , reports are to hand of yields of twenty-five , thirty and thirty-five bushels to the acre. Scores of yields are reported of forty and some as high as sixty bushels. The farmer , who takes care of his soil , who gets his seed-bed ready early , is certain of a splendid crop. The news of the magnificent crop yield throughout the Canadian West will be pleasing-to the friends of the thousands of Americans who are resi dents In that country and .who are vastly instrumental in the assistance they are rendering to let the world know its capabilities. Harvard Scored. Jt was the morning of the Yale-Har- i-ard game at Cambridge , and two of ' .he New Haven collegians were wan- lering through the Harvard yard , looking at the university buildings , Down a walk toward thorn came a routh of serious aspect , but palpably in undergraduate. "I bog your pardon , " said the Yale nan , who Is a bit of a wag , to the stranger , "can you tell me where I : an llnd Harvard university ? " "I'm very sorry , " said the serious > ne , with never a smile. "They've ocked it up. You see , there are" so nany Yale men in town. " "Off His Feed. " Diner ( to his neighbor after having lireo helpings of fish and ment ) 1'vo ; ot no appetite to-night. Neighbor You hide it very well , hen. Charity and Courage. Knicker Do you ever cast your tread on the waters ? New wed No ; nil I dare to do is to brow < old water on the bread. Ir. I'lcrco's I'cllcts , small , sn ar-coatod. P.-HT to ako ns vaiul ) . n-KUlato ana InvlKuruto stoiimcu Ivcrana IxjucUauJ cutoconstlpaiiun Don't blame the phonograph it It has i bad record When You're Hoarse Use\ Gives immediate relief. The first dose relieves your aching throat and j [ allays the irritation. Guaranteed to II contain no opiates. Very palatable. AllDruagUu , 25c. )